Kuwait’s armed forces detected several hostile drones in Kuwaiti airspace at dawn and dealt with them under approved procedures, the defense ministry spokesman said on Sunday.
Colonel Saud Abdulaziz Al-Atwan said the armed forces were fully ready to protect the country’s security and the safety of citizens and residents.
Iranian deputy parliament speaker said on Sunday that Tehran’s policy was confrontation with the United States.
“Our policy is neither compromise nor surrender; it is battle with America,” Hamidreza Haji-Babai said.
He added that Washington had sought to pressure Iran by blocking oil movement, but Tehran had countered the move by opening borders across 16 provinces.
The MP said the world knew a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz would cause a major oil crisis and sharp price increases in Europe and the United States within less than a month.
Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani urged all parties to respond to mediation efforts in the meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff in Miami, Qatar’s foreign ministry said on Sunday.
The ministry said the talks covered regional developments and Pakistani mediation aimed at reducing escalation amid the Iran war.
The meeting also discussed Qatar-US cooperation, particularly in defense and energy, the ministry said.
Iran’s internet blackout entered its 72nd day on Sunday, with connectivity flatlining after 1,704 hours, internet monitor NetBlocks said.
“The unprecedented measure is well into its third month with no indication of a wider restoration as authorities bar the general public from international access,” it added in a post on X.
Prices for some medicines in Iran have surged by as much as 400% and pharmacies are struggling to supply critical drugs to patients, a pharmacists’ association official said on Sunday.
Mehdi Zahmatkesh, head of the Pharmacists Association in Razavi Khorasan province, told the state news agency IRNA that shortages were affecting medications for cancer, MS, dialysis, transplant, hemophilia, cardiac, respiratory and psychiatric patients.
“We have faced price increases ranging from 20% to 400% for some medicines,” Zahmatkesh said, attributing the worsening crisis to the removal of subsidized foreign currency and damage caused by the recent war.
The remarks add to growing signs of strain in Iran’s healthcare sector, where citizens and pharmacists have increasingly reported difficulties obtaining essential medication.
Pharmacies struggle with unpaid insurance claims
Pharmacies, Zahmatkesh said, were also facing severe liquidity problems because insurance providers had failed to pay outstanding debts worth between 500 billion and four trillion rials (between $283,000 and $2.26 million).
“With the sharp increase in medicine prices and delayed payments from insurers, pharmacies are facing difficulties supplying medicine for hard-to-treat patients,” he said.
Zahmatkesh urged insurance organizations to settle pharmacy claims within the legally mandated 45-day period so pharmacies can maintain enough cash flow to purchase medicine.
The official’s comments came days after Etemad newspaper quoted Iranian Pharmacists Association spokesman Hadi Ahmadi as saying medicine prices had increased between 30% and 300%.
Ahmadi linked the surge to shrinking government resources for subsidies and reduced capacity to support medicine production and imports.
Customers wait inside a pharmacy in Iran amid rising medicine prices and shortages of some drugs across the country.
Citizens report worsening shortages
In recent weeks, citizens have sent messages to Iran International describing worsening shortages, steep price increases and growing financial hardship.
“Medicine is impossible to find,” one citizen told Iran International. “After searching through 100 pharmacies, even if we find the drug we need, we have to buy it at full price because insurers haven’t paid pharmacies. It’s a disaster.”
Reports received by Iran International also point to rising shortages of psychiatric medication, with some patients and pharmacy workers saying people have been forced to stop or alter treatment because drugs are unavailable or unaffordable.
The latest complaints come as Iran continues to face high inflation, a weakening currency and deepening economic stagnation that have sharply increased living costs for many households.
Healthcare costs weigh on low-income families
Zahmatkesh called for broader insurance coverage to reduce the burden of healthcare costs on patients, particularly low-income families already struggling with inflation and declining purchasing power.
Despite a 45% increase in the minimum wage this year, according to Etemad, the sharp fall in the value of the rial has made treatment costs increasingly unaffordable for poorer households.
Saudi Aramco reported a rise in first-quarter profit on Sunday that exceeded analysts’ expectations after the Iran war drove up prices for oil and refined fuels, Bloomberg reported.
Adjusted net income rose 26% from a year earlier to nearly 126 billion riyals ($33.6 billion) in the first quarter, the report said, citing a company statement.
Analysts had expected profit of 109 billion riyals, according to the report.